Top 10 similar words or synonyms for schuell

schleicher    0.800033

schleicherschuell    0.785333

schll    0.783305

protran    0.781316

scleicher    0.747511

genescreen    0.744011

hybondn    0.743370

nytran    0.739871

transblot    0.728465

rehmna    0.723042

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for schuell

Article Example
James J. Jenkins Schuell, H., & Jenkins, J. J. (1959). The nature of language deficit in aphasia. "Psychological Review", 66, 45–67.
James J. Jenkins Schuell, H., Jenkins, J. J., & Jimenez-Pabon, E. (1964). "The problem of aphasia in adults: Diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment". New York: Hoeber.
Hahnemühle On August 30, 1769, the descendants of the Spiess family sold the mill to Peter Johann Jacob Heinrich Andrae from Osterode for 4,500 Reichsthaler. Andrae suffered an early death, and the mill passed to his son. On August 13, 1884 Oskar Andrae sold the firm to H. J. Heinemann of Hannover who immediately began the construction of a new production facility. Unforeseen difficulties and costs forced Heinemann to give up the factory, and it was sold in 1886 to Carl Hahne who renamed the mill into “Büttenpapierfabrik Hahnemühle”. In 1902 Hahnemühle was converted into a limited company (GmbH) and merged with Schleicher & Schuell, a company from Düren. In 2004 Hahnmühle was demerged from Schleicher & Schuell and operates independently since then.
Reverse phase protein lysate microarray Cell lysates are collected and are serially diluted six to ten times if using colorimetric techniques, or without dilution when fluorometric detection is used (due to the greater dynamic range of fluorescence than colorimetric detection). Serial dilutions are then plated in replicates into a 384- or a 1536-well microtiter plate. The lysates are then printed onto either nitrocellulose or PVDF membrane coated glass slides by a microarrayer such as Aushon BioSystem 2470 or Flexys robot (Genomic solution). Aushon 2470 with a solid pin system is the ideal choice as it can be used for producing arrays with very viscous lysates and it has humidity environmental control and automated slide supply system. That being said, there are published papers showing that Arrayit Microarray Printing Pins can also be used and produce microarrays with much higher throughput using less lysate. The membrane coated glass slides are commercially available from several different companies such as Schleicher and Schuell Bioscience (now owned by GE Whatman www.whatman.com), Grace BioLabs (www.gracebio.com), Thermo Scientific, and SCHOTT Nexterion (www.schott.com/nexterion).